The first of the Clerestory windows on the south side of the nave. This
window has been cleaned in recent years and is far more legible than most
of the other clerestory glass.

St Mary of Egypt was the most popular of the "desert mothers"
or female eremitical saints - most of whom bear more than a passing resemblance
to Mary Magdalen but conflated with elements from the lives of their more
established male counterparts, such as St Anthony & St Paul of the
Desert. For the St Mary of Egypt window at Bourges, click here.
There is also a window dedicated to this saint at Auxerre, which I will
upload in due course.

St Laumer (aka Lomer or Laudomarus) was the 6th century founder and first
abbot of a small monastery at Corbion (modern day Moutiers au Perche,
roughly 25 miles west of Chartres). He supposedly started life as a shepherd
boy before receiving his calling (so not unlike St Lubinus) and died aged
100 - which may explain why he is shown being visited in his sick bed
by the Bishop of Chartres in panel A1.